Mickey Rooney dead at 93

In recent years, he kept working in such movies as George Miller's Babe: Pig In The City (1998), Night at the Museum (2006) and The Muppets (2011).

A versatile talent who excelled at comedy, drama, singing and dancing - a personification of the cheerful, irrepressible, energetic American boy in his early career - the five-foot, two-inch (157cm) actor was born Joseph Yule jnr in Brooklyn in 1920.

At 18 months, he had made his stage debut dressed in a tiny tuxedo in his family's vaudeville act. He had made his first screen appearance, in the silent short Not To Be Trusted (1926), by the time he was five.

As a teenager he was signed by MGM and became a star, firstly as the young version of a gangster in Manhattan Melodrama (1934) and then as Andy Hardy in A Family Affair (1937). He shone as the trouble-prone character in 15 movies and was reputedly earning $US150,000 a year before he was 20.

After entertaining the troops during World War II, Rooney made a difficult transition to adult roles, while broadening into television, stage performances and directing movies.

His awards include a special Juvenile Oscar in 1939 for Boys Town, four nominations for Babes In Arms (1939), The Human Comedy (1943), The Bold and the Brave (1956) and The Black Stallion and an honourary Oscar in 1983 in recognition of his "50 years of versatility in a variety of memorable film peformances".

"When I was 19 years old I was the number one star for two years," Rooney said when he accepted that honourary Oscar. "When I was 40, nobody wanted me. I couldn't get a job."

In 1982, he won an Emmy for playing an an intellectually disabled man who finds love in the telemovie Bill.

Rooney played an animal trainer in the Australian film Babe: Pig in the City, the 1998 sequel to the hit movie Babe.

Co-star Magda Szubanski said at the time that while she only had one scene with Rooney, her father was over the moon. As a boy in Warsaw, her father grew up on Andy Hardy films.

"He was saying if someone had told him that one of his kids would be in a film with Mickey Rooney he would never have believed them," she said.

"It feels like a million miles away.

"And even though there is more traffic now between Australia and Hollywood, that kind of big-time Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Ava Gardner Hollywood is like Mount Olympus, mythical and removed. So it was quite extraordinary, seeing him around."

In an up-and-down personal life, Rooney was married eight times, initially to his MGM co-star Ava Gardner. He married his last wife, singer Jan Chamberlin, in 1978 and separated in 2012.

In 1962, he filed for bankruptcy after losing his money in his divorces and love for horse races and craps games.

In 2011, he accused two of his wife's children of taking his money, denying him medication and withholding food.

At the time of his death, Rooney was living in California and filming The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

"When I open a refrigerator door and the light goes on, I want to perform," he once said.

TMZ reported that Rooney died after being "in ill health for quite some time".